
New Research Will Help Her Daughter With Down Syndrome, This Colorado Mom Says
University of Colorado research could upend the way scientists treat Down Syndrome and related conditions.

Bored At The Boarding Gate? This Guy Says Try Some Push-Ups
Author Ken Seifert wrote “The Complete Guide to Airport Exercise.”

Lawmaker Seeks Bailout For Colorado’s Biggest Substance Abuse Center
Arapahoe House, which treats about 5,000 substance abuse cases a year in the Denver metro area, is scheduled to close January 2.

After Two Lung Transplants This Opera Singer Still Performs
Charity Tillemann-Dick grew up in Denver and began a professional singer career in her late teens. She’s since had two lung transplants — and returned to singing after each of them.

Russia Olympic Ban Isn’t A Sure Win For Anti-Dopers, Colorado Expert Says
The International Olympic Committee this week banned the entire Russian team from the upcoming winter games, citing widespread, government-backed doping.

Meet A Man With A Better Seat Than The Queen At The Last Royal Wedding
Ian Thompson was a verger at Westminster Abbey for the wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton.

Gov. Hickenlooper, A Homeowner And A Mineral Rights Holder Hash Out Oil, Gas Issues
How do you balance homeownership, mineral rights and local control?

A Denver Classroom Helps Refugees Navigate A New Language And A New Culture
Denver author Helen Thorpe spent a year in an English class for recent refugees at South High School in Denver.

Think She Can’t? One-Handed Rock Climber Maureen Beck Is Out To Prove You Wrong
Climber Maureen Beck was born without a left hand. She’s won national and world championships in paraclimbing.

Denver’s Teen School Board Candidate Lost Tuesday, Says He’ll Be Back
Recent high school graduate Tay Anderson placed third in the contest to represent northeast Denver on the school board.

Local Voters Will Find High-Speed Internet, Pot, Money Issues On The Ballot In 2017
Voters go to the polls next Tuesday to consider issues facing Colorado’s cities and counties.

How High School Journalists Covered Classmates’ Suicides In Grand Junction
A student reporter and her faculty adviser had to consider the possibility of copycat suicides as they decided how the Grand Junction High School paper would cover two student deaths last year.

The Strange Friendship Of Wild West Icons Sitting Bull And Buffalo Bill
They started on opposite sides of the Indian Wars but went on to stardom in a traveling show that drew a million people in a year. A new book chronicles the friendship of Buffalo Bill and Sitting Bull.

Coloradans Deployed To Las Vegas, Puerto Rico, And Wildfires In California Help In Crises
A coroner, 20 mental health workers and 85 firefighters are among Coloradans fulfilling a multi-state agreement to help in disasters

Think A Politician Violated Ethical Or Finance Rules? Here Are Tips For Making A Complaint
A nonprofit watchdog that monitored ethical violations and breaches of campaign finance laws goes out of business at the end of 2017, and hopes citizens will pick up the slack.

‘Death Of An Heir’ Recounts The Notorious Kidnapping-Turned-Murder Of Adolph Coors III
When an heir to one of Colorado’s most fabled companies disappeared, the crime became international news.